To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1941-11-14

Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1941-11-14, page 01

SHROMCLE
2>\l\J/~~Sernnq Colmnbtts~and Central Ohio Jewish Community \][\\
Vol. 20, No. 47
COhUMBl'S, OHIO, FIUDAY, NOVKMIIKU II, l!)ll
0«vot«d to American And JnwUh Ideals
A. Z. A. SABBATH TO BE OBSEBVED
Vi
The larRost nallonally orRiin- Ized proRrum ot .lowish religious services for nnti !)y youl.h were heifl on P'riiiay evening of this weel< when 12,000 memliers of Aleph Zadik Aleph, B'nai B'rilh youth organization, gathered in ^synagogues and temples in more than 250 communities through¬ out the country for the Kith an¬ nual ohser- vance of A. Z. A. Sa hha t h. Every, aspect of the service was entirely in the hands of A. Z. A. hoys, who served as rahbi, cantor and choir, while the reg¬ ular rahbis and cantors sat with the con-
laadore Zoldln gregalion.
In Columbus, however, A. Z. A Sabbath will he observed on next Friday evening, Nov. 21, at the East Broad St. Temple. Original sermons on the subject, "lewish Youth Looks At Relig¬ ion," will be delivered by Eugene Borowltz and David Greenberg; opening prayer, Morton Shift; short addresses, Harry Goldstein. advisor; and Rabbi N. Zelizer; closing prayer, Sol Young. The cantor who will chant the pray¬ ers will be Isadore Zeldin - ,-.',The. qonunlttee in charge of ,.i,th(||8atSirt,ces;;'^hlch are to begin £i. 9t:;8:0tt P.'g:i ektends a cordial 'fe, ..InyltaUon to the entire Jewish "- 'f¥(SO»W»*t/ to attend
84 New Members Are Initiated In B'nai B'rith IVIonday
taiinched in 1927, A. Z. A. Sab- batli is a part of the year- round program of religious ac¬ tivity which includes attendance at religious services, sponsor¬ ship of_ junior congregations, ob¬ servance of all religious holidays by chapter programs, and an¬ nual contests in sermon-writing and Hebrew letter-writing. liand A. Z. A.'s Effort
Leaders of American .ludaism this week paid tribute to the re¬ ligious program of A. Z. A. in statements made public at A. Z. A. headquarters Dr. James G. Heller, Cincinnali, president of the Central Conference of Ameri¬ can Rabbis, declared that "A. Z. A. is trying to do an essential Job among young Jews. And its annual Sabliath observance ought to mean the rededication of young men to Judaism in a day they need their religion des¬ perately."
Dr. David de Sola Pool, New York, noted Orthodox rabbi, as¬ serted that A. Z. A. Sabbath "is a highly valuable instrument for impressing our Jewish youth in America with a sense of those traditional Jewish values inher¬ ent in Judaism which are the sole cause and purpose of our survival as a people." Dr. is- rael Chipkln, secretary of the American Association for Jewish Education and president of the National Conference of Jewish Social Work, said "I am ail for it. TI e fact that the A. Z. A. members themselves contiuct such service.s is to their tTedlt." The late Dr. Edward L. Israel, executive director of the Union of American Hebrew Congrega. tions and president of the Syna¬ gogue Council of America, wrote shortly before passing that A. Z. A., "using the strong frater¬ nal bonds to re-enforce spiritual values, is arming our Jewish youth with the only real weapon which can bring us successfully through tha trying period in •which'we now live."
i\ighiy-roiu- candidates W(M'e initiated at Zion Lo<lge No. 02. B'nai B'rith meeting Inst Mon¬ day evening at the Broad STt. Temple. The following weie
memliers of tbe class:
Di-. .1. .J. Mpris. Snm Allmdn, Mnl- colin Aslie, IsiHiol"'' Avrt'tl. AlfiL'd lien- (ler. Al. BeUGr, Leo Blum. Jerome Bornhelm. Ben B. BorowlVz. Bnrney Bianwene. Albert Brnverman, Jnek Brnd.sky. Mllt(,n Caller. Ivtorrls Chanis, Morrl.s N. Cohen. Harry C. Cooper. Irving Edison. Joe ElsenherK. r^r. W. f. Enselmnn. MUton Erman. Snm Felnberg. Nathan Gatoff. livInK (^,ert- ner. Sidney GUIman, Morris Glaser. IJr. Morris GoldberK, Dave Goodman, Dr. M. L. Goodman. Albert Goorey.
Joe Gordon. Harry Greenblatl. Isa¬ dore D. Gre,^nsteln. R. J. Grobnn, s. L. Grundsteln. David Gubei-man, Jul¬ ius Gussacoff. Myer Hausman. Max Herman. Joseph Horchow. Arthur L. Jnrobs. Stanley Jay. David B. Jaye. Bernard Kaplan. iVIartIn Kaufherr. Rudolph Klempercr. G. Goodman Kap¬ lan. A. E. Katz. Phil I,akln. Mai-iln I.evlnfv Money l>evlnson. Hlcbard I.lfh- erman. Edwin B. LInlek. Herhort R. Llnlck. Stanley Miller. William Null- mat?. Nalhan Peer, Dr. G. W. Pelte.son. Leonard G. Qulnn. David Rich. Sam¬ uel C. Robbins.
Maurice Rokeach. Lsador Rosenfeld. Michael Rotblatt, Harry L. Samuels. Dr. Irving Shulman. Roy Shiy)lro. Joe Sherman. Al Slegel. Max Slegel, Theo¬ dore Slmson. Saul Socoloff. Ram H. Solomon Samuel Staub. Jack Swartz. George Swerdlow, B. Edward Tarches. Irwin 'ropolosky, Sid Tyroier. Albert Wasserstrom. Julius White. Roy Wolf Hyman Weinberg. Dave Wlgor. Cody Zelizer.
Members of degree team per¬ forming the initiation Included; Allan Tarshish, president; Wil¬ lard Levin, monitor; Isadore M. Harris, assistant monitor; Maur¬ ice Topson, warden; Harry Gold¬ stein, treasurer; Henry Cowan, vici.'-president.
Stanley Jacobs, of Chicago, chairman of Anti-Defamation League s|)eakers Bureau deliv¬ ered Ihe principal address, his subject being "Tho Battle of the Two Worlds".
Early Deadline!
On aceoiinl of '^Ilanks^lv- illg next Thlirs(lji.v. N'ov. 2mh, all news miitln- »n\\ social ilenis must reiielt Ihc CHltONICl,!', Office by no tiller than Tlirs(I:i.v noon of next week.
Tlie co-operallon of all orgalil/al.ions as well as in- divitltials will be appre<'lal- I'd l>.v Ihe ellilorial staff.
OHIO
.IKWISH CHKONICMO Phone Al>. 2!l.">4
Kusworm To Address B. B. Auxiliary Tea IVIonday Evening
Zion l.oiige B'nai B'rilh .\lixil- lat\' extends ti cordial invitation lo the local .lewish cotnnuinily lo jiticnd its membefship te;i next Monday. Nov. 17. at the Kast Brotid St. Temple. The spetiker f o r this occasion will be Sidney (;. Kliswonn of Dayton. O., National treas¬ urer of B'nai
Vichy Finds Jewish Scapegoats For Berlin
fJKNKVA (.II'Si-Francii-Ger- ni;i 11 "coliiiborat ion", which reach¬ ed its clim.'tx when Marshall Pe- tnin declared that all of Knrnpe owed ,1 debt of gratitude to Ilit- Icr for fighting Bolshevism, found another otitiet at the ex¬ pense of .lews when it revealed !h;it four ".lewish rommunisls" liave been "iilentified" as the as¬ sassins of a Germ.'tn colonel nn the morning of Oct. 2nth at N'antes. I'"ifty hostages had been Iii'ld waiting for execution. The discoven- of tbe .lewish "(Timin- als" followed Vice-Premier I-'rancnis Dnrlan's visit to Par-
Natl. Board Member To Address Hadassah Next Tuesday
Mrs. .lack A. Cloodman, of In liianapoliK, momhor of the Na tional Roai'd of Hadassah will be honoi-ed guest ami speaker at dessert luncheon and meeting of the local chapter on Tuesday, Nov. 18, at 1:()0 p. m,, at the Ri-y don Rond Temple.
Mrs. lioodman has for many years been an outstanding Com¬ munal worker in Indianapolis, She is a member of the Board of ihe Indianapolis Jewish Wel¬ fare Fund. Rutlget CommUlee of the Indianapolis Community Chest, Member of the Roard of Directors of the Women's Com¬ mittee of the Indianapolis Rym- I)hony OrcheKtra Society and one of the Founders of the Civic Theatre. She is a sister of Dr. Alexander S. Wolf of St. Louis, who while a student at the Uni¬ versity of Vienna was secretary to the late Theodore Heml.
Mrs. (;oodman has done con¬ siderable field work for Hadas¬ sah. She is a capable speak¬ er and organizer. She brings to her Hadassah work a vast stoi-e of knowledge and much charm of pei'sonality.
The program for the meeting will Include a report of the re¬ cent National' Hadassah Conven¬ tion by Mrs. Bernard Peitlinger, President; Current Events by Mrs. Martin Godofsky; and group singing led by Mrs. Max ZlBkind.
Rabbi Samuel M. Gup will give
^w
gency and the important part the auxiliaries Sidney Koiwotm are taking to
carry oK the most amBUlous'prf*- gram in B'nai B'rith history. His message should be of vital importance to every Jew and Jewess in Columbus.
Another feature of the meet ing will be Ihc initiation of some fiO new memliers which will bring tho mend)ership of the local auxiliary to an all lime high of almost -100. The ritual, will lie presented liy the degree un\m nf which Mrs, Harry Krak¬ off i.s chairman.
Hostesses for the evening in¬ clude Me.sdames Joseph Levison, Meyer Cohen. Joe Minkin, Her¬ man Cohen, M. Ilep[)s. Wm. Tandy, Sidney L. Katz and Harry Shell-
Slrenglhoning the Nuremberg cliarafter nf ils ant\-Jow\sh laws. rharaclor nf ils anti-Jewish l.iws. Vichy I''rance issued addi- Moiinl decrees affetljng .lewish jiarticipntion in the econrimic life nf the country. Jews were forbidden to derive any profits from businesses they previously nwneil but whieh have since l)een turned over tn "Aryan" managers. Jews are debarred frnm acquiring an enterprise or IVr ith who! from managing one. except from will discuss the; special limited exemptions that Order's posi- might be granted by local pre- tion in the fects. present emer-j Jewish schools and hospitals
59 American Educators Back ]c\\ ish Home * In Palestine
MOW VOUK (.lI'Sl-- Declar¬ ing Ihat the Hnirour Dcclaralion "has now ac(|uire(l a far greater urgency for the .lewi.sh people and Ihc world nl large than at the time of ii.s promulgalion," fifty-nine prominonl American educators. including forty-six prcsificMiis. deans and chancel¬ lors of {-olleges and universities, issued a call for Great Hritain to live up to ils pledge nf Nftvem- bcr 2. 1017 "tff facilitalc the achievemenl" of a Jewish Na¬ tional Home in I'nleslinc. -
The statemcnl also called for the rec(tgnili(ui of Palestine as "a factor of major importance" for Ihe rescue of Nazi victims, and pointed oul Ihat "Jewish cntfM-prise in Palestine, more- nve?', has operated not to the detrimeni but lo the benefit of the Arali population of tliat country, Axis propaganda to the contrary notwithstanding." That .'inO.OOO refugees have found a home in I*alestin<' since the rise of Hitler is emphasized in the statement by the educators.
"In the twenty-four years that have elapscfl." the statement read in part, "two important fads have become n:\anvfest. First, the Jews have demonstra¬ ted theii abditv to lestoie the productivity of the Holy Land and make, it a fittmg home for all those who might desire to Second, the number
hitherto independently managed, were placed under the direct supervision of the Commission- g^^g ^^ j^
.fi^^tTj^^l^eHo echo per.bM^y:S?;^Sl^#^
AIM'E.AIi TO C;KOIt(;l.\NS TO FKJHT ni(;OTl{V
JewR, with Le Matin plibllshlng an article asserting that the de¬ struction of the-greater part of Kiev was due to "Jewish Bolshe- vil^ agents" who stayed behind after the Russian Army had left.
Rumanian press aeeounts of the Nazi ca|)ture of Kiev, early in the Russian eampaign. had reported terrible havoc and de¬ struction lo thai city. The whole fashionable Kreslshalnil< sec- lion -- till Ihe hotels, theaters and public liuililinRs — now lie in ruins. The great Kiev syna- [^ogue was blown up and what is described as the .lewish dis- lrl(T of the city suffered greal daiuage.
\K\V VOUK (.IPSI—An effort lo unify citizens of (leorgia against religious bigotry has .just been completed by a groui) of (leorgia leaders and Ihe Nation al Conference of Christians and .lews, in cooperation wilh the Cath<iUc Committee of the Soulh. it was aiuiounced here by the National Conference.
I'ndergraduates of 18 colleges and imiversiiles were warned by leading Protestants. Catholics and .lews \isiting the schools againsi religious or ratial [)reju- dice as being a "social disease," dangerous lu ihe heallh and mor¬ ale of tbe nation. Among tiie colleges particii)ating in the cam¬ paign were the l'niversiiy of (Jeorgia. Ceorgia Tech anti FJm- ory LJniversily.
Plans Completed For T. I. Men's Club Party And Dance
the opening prayer.
The program has been arrang¬ ed by Mrs. I,. M. I'hillips, chair man; Mrs. 1. J. Slone, co-chair man, and the following mem bers of the Program Committee: Mrs- Max Zislcind, Mrs. Martin Godofslty, Mrs. Herbert Linlcli and Mrs. Milton Goodman.
Utatlon and refuge hiia.'Jii larly since the Nazlflcatlon of Germany and other lands, been vastly Increased It may there¬ fore he s.ud that the Balfour Deelaralion has now acquired a fjU" greater urgency for the .lew¬ ish people and the world at large than at the lime of ils promul¬ gation."
Hillel Players' Production "R. U. R." Well Received
N'e.iil Wednesilay. Nov. Ill, i^ Ihe date of Ihe gala Thanksgiv ing Parly and dance of Ihe Tif¬ ereth Israel's Men's Club. Th event will gel under way at KtKl P. M., in Ihe Social Hall of Ihe Temple and will be open lo members and Iheir escorts.
Under the dii-eclion of Donald 1. SnUler, Program Chalnnan of the Men's Club, Mrs. Charle: Solomon, who is assisting Mr Snider, and Myer Warsaski, Re- freshmeiUs Chairmen, a-most en¬ tertaining program has been planned for the enilre evening.
In addition to dancing, there will be a vai-iely of games, wilh prizes for Ihe conlestaiUs. Re¬ freshments of all kinds, from hamburgers for the men to cookies and lea for the ladies, will lie served.
A caijaclly attendance of mem¬ liers of the Men's Club is antici¬ pated.
Khow your BPpreelatloD to tha Ghranldp't SO yeari of toyol and do- voted terrlce to Colmnboa JewUh Commoaity by poylns your ¦¦bMilp- tlon now—I8.0O lo* the year.
Alone Taussig aiul Marvin (Jold-
slon In Leading Holes
Of Tnusual Play
The Ohio State l'niversiiy Hil¬ lel Players thrilled a caiJacity crowd at I'niversity ilall Chap¬ el la.^t Thursday nlghi with their opening i>rodiiction of "R. II. R." Under the professional (litection of Michael Schwartz of Columbus, the Players re¬ claimed tlieir right lo be recog¬ nized as one of the finest stu¬ dent dranuitlL' groups on the campus
Alene Ray Taussig and Mar¬ vin Goldston handled their lead¬ ing roles exceiilionaliy well. They were su|iported by Mor¬ ton Shapiro, llari-y Selinger, Howard .Lacobson. Kugene Horo¬ witz, Mort,on Stantllfer, Rona Rapiian, Dan Simon and ,Ierry Lustlg, all of whom turned our finished iierformances.
"R. U. R." is a grim fantasy resembling the theme of the old Jewish legend of the Golem. Rossum's Rotiots, just like the faclst robots of loday, have no sense of decency, honor or pity. The two are determined to des¬ troy civilization.
The performance will be re¬ pealed tonight (Saturday) 8 00 p. m., at U. HaU Chapel. Tick els are available at the box of¬ fice, with a 40c charge for ad¬ mission.
t.iitt«W.t..i
.Iv.
^fwmstiiii^miiemims
.a«!tfca!.A.,JiVte.-^ .T fr-
A-iJ
,"J""V"J'PJ.

SHROMCLE
2>\l\J/~~Sernnq Colmnbtts~and Central Ohio Jewish Community \][\\
Vol. 20, No. 47
COhUMBl'S, OHIO, FIUDAY, NOVKMIIKU II, l!)ll
0«vot«d to American And JnwUh Ideals
A. Z. A. SABBATH TO BE OBSEBVED
Vi
The larRost nallonally orRiin- Ized proRrum ot .lowish religious services for nnti !)y youl.h were heifl on P'riiiay evening of this weel< when 12,000 memliers of Aleph Zadik Aleph, B'nai B'rilh youth organization, gathered in ^synagogues and temples in more than 250 communities through¬ out the country for the Kith an¬ nual ohser- vance of A. Z. A. Sa hha t h. Every, aspect of the service was entirely in the hands of A. Z. A. hoys, who served as rahbi, cantor and choir, while the reg¬ ular rahbis and cantors sat with the con-
laadore Zoldln gregalion.
In Columbus, however, A. Z. A Sabbath will he observed on next Friday evening, Nov. 21, at the East Broad St. Temple. Original sermons on the subject, "lewish Youth Looks At Relig¬ ion," will be delivered by Eugene Borowltz and David Greenberg; opening prayer, Morton Shift; short addresses, Harry Goldstein. advisor; and Rabbi N. Zelizer; closing prayer, Sol Young. The cantor who will chant the pray¬ ers will be Isadore Zeldin - ,-.',The. qonunlttee in charge of ,.i,th(||8atSirt,ces;;'^hlch are to begin £i. 9t:;8:0tt P.'g:i ektends a cordial 'fe, ..InyltaUon to the entire Jewish "- 'f¥(SO»W»*t/ to attend
84 New Members Are Initiated In B'nai B'rith IVIonday
taiinched in 1927, A. Z. A. Sab- batli is a part of the year- round program of religious ac¬ tivity which includes attendance at religious services, sponsor¬ ship of_ junior congregations, ob¬ servance of all religious holidays by chapter programs, and an¬ nual contests in sermon-writing and Hebrew letter-writing. liand A. Z. A.'s Effort
Leaders of American .ludaism this week paid tribute to the re¬ ligious program of A. Z. A. in statements made public at A. Z. A. headquarters Dr. James G. Heller, Cincinnali, president of the Central Conference of Ameri¬ can Rabbis, declared that "A. Z. A. is trying to do an essential Job among young Jews. And its annual Sabliath observance ought to mean the rededication of young men to Judaism in a day they need their religion des¬ perately."
Dr. David de Sola Pool, New York, noted Orthodox rabbi, as¬ serted that A. Z. A. Sabbath "is a highly valuable instrument for impressing our Jewish youth in America with a sense of those traditional Jewish values inher¬ ent in Judaism which are the sole cause and purpose of our survival as a people." Dr. is- rael Chipkln, secretary of the American Association for Jewish Education and president of the National Conference of Jewish Social Work, said "I am ail for it. TI e fact that the A. Z. A. members themselves contiuct such service.s is to their tTedlt." The late Dr. Edward L. Israel, executive director of the Union of American Hebrew Congrega. tions and president of the Syna¬ gogue Council of America, wrote shortly before passing that A. Z. A., "using the strong frater¬ nal bonds to re-enforce spiritual values, is arming our Jewish youth with the only real weapon which can bring us successfully through tha trying period in •which'we now live."
i\ighiy-roiu- candidates W(M'e initiated at Zion Loevlnson. Hlcbard I.lfh- erman. Edwin B. LInlek. Herhort R. Llnlck. Stanley Miller. William Null- mat?. Nalhan Peer, Dr. G. W. Pelte.son. Leonard G. Qulnn. David Rich. Sam¬ uel C. Robbins.
Maurice Rokeach. Lsador Rosenfeld. Michael Rotblatt, Harry L. Samuels. Dr. Irving Shulman. Roy Shiy)lro. Joe Sherman. Al Slegel. Max Slegel, Theo¬ dore Slmson. Saul Socoloff. Ram H. Solomon Samuel Staub. Jack Swartz. George Swerdlow, B. Edward Tarches. Irwin 'ropolosky, Sid Tyroier. Albert Wasserstrom. Julius White. Roy Wolf Hyman Weinberg. Dave Wlgor. Cody Zelizer.
Members of degree team per¬ forming the initiation Included; Allan Tarshish, president; Wil¬ lard Levin, monitor; Isadore M. Harris, assistant monitor; Maur¬ ice Topson, warden; Harry Gold¬ stein, treasurer; Henry Cowan, vici.'-president.
Stanley Jacobs, of Chicago, chairman of Anti-Defamation League s|)eakers Bureau deliv¬ ered Ihe principal address, his subject being "Tho Battle of the Two Worlds".
Early Deadline!
On aceoiinl of '^Ilanks^lv- illg next Thlirs(lji.v. N'ov. 2mh, all news miitln- »n\\ social ilenis must reiielt Ihc CHltONICl,!', Office by no tiller than Tlirs(I:i.v noon of next week.
Tlie co-operallon of all orgalil/al.ions as well as in- divitltials will be appre.v Ihe ellilorial staff.
OHIO
.IKWISH CHKONICMO Phone Al>. 2!l.">4
Kusworm To Address B. B. Auxiliary Tea IVIonday Evening
Zion l.oiige B'nai B'rilh .\lixil- lat\' extends ti cordial invitation lo the local .lewish cotnnuinily lo jiticnd its membefship te;i next Monday. Nov. 17. at the Kast Brotid St. Temple. The spetiker f o r this occasion will be Sidney (;. Kliswonn of Dayton. O., National treas¬ urer of B'nai
Vichy Finds Jewish Scapegoats For Berlin
fJKNKVA (.II'Si-Francii-Ger- ni;i 11 "coliiiborat ion", which reach¬ ed its clim.'tx when Marshall Pe- tnin declared that all of Knrnpe owed ,1 debt of gratitude to Ilit- Icr for fighting Bolshevism, found another otitiet at the ex¬ pense of .lews when it revealed !h;it four ".lewish rommunisls" liave been "iilentified" as the as¬ sassins of a Germ.'tn colonel nn the morning of Oct. 2nth at N'antes. I'"ifty hostages had been Iii'ld waiting for execution. The discoven- of tbe .lewish "(Timin- als" followed Vice-Premier I-'rancnis Dnrlan's visit to Par-
Natl. Board Member To Address Hadassah Next Tuesday
Mrs. .lack A. Cloodman, of In liianapoliK, momhor of the Na tional Roai'd of Hadassah will be honoi-ed guest ami speaker at dessert luncheon and meeting of the local chapter on Tuesday, Nov. 18, at 1:()0 p. m,, at the Ri-y don Rond Temple.
Mrs. lioodman has for many years been an outstanding Com¬ munal worker in Indianapolis, She is a member of the Board of ihe Indianapolis Jewish Wel¬ fare Fund. Rutlget CommUlee of the Indianapolis Community Chest, Member of the Roard of Directors of the Women's Com¬ mittee of the Indianapolis Rym- I)hony OrcheKtra Society and one of the Founders of the Civic Theatre. She is a sister of Dr. Alexander S. Wolf of St. Louis, who while a student at the Uni¬ versity of Vienna was secretary to the late Theodore Heml.
Mrs. (;oodman has done con¬ siderable field work for Hadas¬ sah. She is a capable speak¬ er and organizer. She brings to her Hadassah work a vast stoi-e of knowledge and much charm of pei'sonality.
The program for the meeting will Include a report of the re¬ cent National' Hadassah Conven¬ tion by Mrs. Bernard Peitlinger, President; Current Events by Mrs. Martin Godofsky; and group singing led by Mrs. Max ZlBkind.
Rabbi Samuel M. Gup will give
^w
gency and the important part the auxiliaries Sidney Koiwotm are taking to
carry oK the most amBUlous'prf*- gram in B'nai B'rith history. His message should be of vital importance to every Jew and Jewess in Columbus.
Another feature of the meet ing will be Ihc initiation of some fiO new memliers which will bring tho mend)ership of the local auxiliary to an all lime high of almost -100. The ritual, will lie presented liy the degree un\m nf which Mrs, Harry Krak¬ off i.s chairman.
Hostesses for the evening in¬ clude Me.sdames Joseph Levison, Meyer Cohen. Joe Minkin, Her¬ man Cohen, M. Ilep[)s. Wm. Tandy, Sidney L. Katz and Harry Shell-
Slrenglhoning the Nuremberg cliarafter nf ils ant\-Jow\sh laws. rharaclor nf ils anti-Jewish l.iws. Vichy I''rance issued addi- Moiinl decrees affetljng .lewish jiarticipntion in the econrimic life nf the country. Jews were forbidden to derive any profits from businesses they previously nwneil but whieh have since l)een turned over tn "Aryan" managers. Jews are debarred frnm acquiring an enterprise or IVr ith who! from managing one. except from will discuss the; special limited exemptions that Order's posi- might be granted by local pre- tion in the fects. present emer-j Jewish schools and hospitals
59 American Educators Back ]c\\ ish Home * In Palestine
MOW VOUK (.lI'Sl-- Declar¬ ing Ihat the Hnirour Dcclaralion "has now ac(|uire(l a far greater urgency for the .lewi.sh people and Ihc world nl large than at the time of ii.s promulgalion," fifty-nine prominonl American educators. including forty-six prcsificMiis. deans and chancel¬ lors of {-olleges and universities, issued a call for Great Hritain to live up to ils pledge nf Nftvem- bcr 2. 1017 "tff facilitalc the achievemenl" of a Jewish Na¬ tional Home in I'nleslinc. -
The statemcnl also called for the rec(tgnili(ui of Palestine as "a factor of major importance" for Ihe rescue of Nazi victims, and pointed oul Ihat "Jewish cntfM-prise in Palestine, more- nve?', has operated not to the detrimeni but lo the benefit of the Arali population of tliat country, Axis propaganda to the contrary notwithstanding." That .'inO.OOO refugees have found a home in I*alestinrodiiction of "R. II. R." Under the professional (litection of Michael Schwartz of Columbus, the Players re¬ claimed tlieir right lo be recog¬ nized as one of the finest stu¬ dent dranuitlL' groups on the campus
Alene Ray Taussig and Mar¬ vin Goldston handled their lead¬ ing roles exceiilionaliy well. They were su|iported by Mor¬ ton Shapiro, llari-y Selinger, Howard .Lacobson. Kugene Horo¬ witz, Mort,on Stantllfer, Rona Rapiian, Dan Simon and ,Ierry Lustlg, all of whom turned our finished iierformances.
"R. U. R." is a grim fantasy resembling the theme of the old Jewish legend of the Golem. Rossum's Rotiots, just like the faclst robots of loday, have no sense of decency, honor or pity. The two are determined to des¬ troy civilization.
The performance will be re¬ pealed tonight (Saturday) 8 00 p. m., at U. HaU Chapel. Tick els are available at the box of¬ fice, with a 40c charge for ad¬ mission.
t.iitt«W.t..i
.Iv.
^fwmstiiii^miiemims
.a«!tfca!.A.,JiVte.-^ .T fr-
A-iJ
,"J""V"J'PJ.